HOUSTON, TEXAS - APRIL 26: Aaron Judge #99 of the New York Yankees runs the bases after hitting a solo home run in the sixth inning against the Houston Astros at Daikin Park on April 26, 2026 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Maria Lysaker/Getty Images) | Getty Images
If you haven’t been paying much attention to non-Orioles baseball so far this year, I regret to inform you that the 2026 New York Yankees are a good team. Their 20 wins are the most in the American League. They have scored 153 runs, second-most in the AL. They have allowed 106, which is the fewest. And while the Orioles spent yesterday playing a doubleheader, the Yankees had an off day.
It could be a long four-game series. And, in fact, the Orioles play the Yankees in seven of the next 13 games.
On offense, the Yankees are being led, as expected, by Aaron Judge. In his 11th season, Judge leads the league with 12 home runs and has an OPS of 1.002. More surprising is first baseman Ben Rice, who has 10 home runs and an even higher OPS than Judge. In Rice’s case, something tells me that a .373 BABIP and a17.2% walk rate are probably not sustainable. Arguably, they are the best offense in the AL.
The starting pitching on the Yankees has been insanely good this year. It has been the best in baseball. The Orioles will face their top four starters in this series. Two of them are lefties. Three of them have K/9 over 10. They just called up one of their top prospects, Elmer Rodríguez, to round out the rotation.
The relief pitching hasn’t been as good as the starters, but they have still been good with an opposing OPS of .710. Closer David Bednar leads the league with nine saves, but his ERA of 3.55 and WHIP of 1.658 are a little ugly.
Note: As of Thursday night, the Orioles have not announced any starters for this series. Chris Bassitt and Brandon Young pitched yesterday, so they are out. With Trevor Rogers and Dean Kremer on the IL, it’s unclear how things will shake out.
Kyle Bradish could pitch on regular rest tonight and Shane Baz could pitch on regular rest on Sunday. Down in the minors, Cade Povich last pitched on April 25th. It stands to reason he’ll be called up for this series to pitch today or tomorrow. As for Monday? Maybe Albert Suárez, if they add him back to the 40-man.
Game 1: Friday, 7:05
TBD vs RHP Will Warren (3-0, 2.59 ERA, 37 SO)
After pitching to a 4.44 ERA over 33 starts last year and getting a few Rookie of the Year votes, Warren is off to a great start in 2026. After failing to pitch deep into the game in his first four starts, Warren has gone seven and six innings in his last two.
So far this year, Warren has good numbers across the board with a 28.7% strikeout rate and just a 5.4% walk rate. When he isn’t striking guys out, he is getting groundouts 48.8% of the time. He’s been doing this despite an average fastball velocity of 93.9 mph.
Last year, Warren faced the Orioles four times, and they did pretty well against him. In 20 innings, he gave up 11 runs (4.95 ERA) and the Orioles hit .272/.333/.506. But that was 4.44 ERA Warren, not 2.59 ERA Warren. In limited plate appearances, Gunnar Henderson (3-for-7, 4 BB) and Colton Cowser (3-for-7) have fared well against Warren.
Game 2: Saturday, 1:35
TBD vs LHP Ryan Weathers 1-2, 3.21 ERA, 40 SO
Lefty alert! The Yankees traded for Weathers in January, with the 26-year-old pitcher coming to the American League for the first time in his career. After a tough start with the Padres, Weathers looked good for the Marlins over the last two seasons before the trade. That has continued for six starts this year with the Yankees.
Weathers is a big strikeout guy with a K rate of just under 30% so far this year, but has struggled with the homer. He’s given up five long balls in six starts, but none in his last appearance against the Astros.
Weathers has never faced the Orioles, and no current Orioles have much experience against him.
Game 3: Sunday, 1:35
TBD vs LHP Max Fried (4-1, 2.09 ERA, 37 SO)
Oh great. Max Fried. Back-to-back lefties!
Imagine a world where the Orioles had signed Max Fried before the 2025 season instead of the Yankees? I can’t either, but it would have been cool. Fried has been exactly what the Yankees expected after signing the ace to an eight-year contract.
Fried’s 47.1 innings pitched over seven starts is tops in the league at this point. He hasn’t been striking as many guys out so far, but is keeping guys off base with just 4.9 hits per nine innings and a WHIP of just 0.803.
Last year, Fried faced the Orioles twice. In June, Fried had the old Quality Start with three runs in six inning. In September, Fried struck out 13 Orioles in 7 shutout innings.
From their time together in the NL East, Pete Alonso has faced Fried 48 times with a hitting line of .238/.333/.405 with two home runs.
Game 4: Monday, 7:05
TBD vs RHP Cam Schlittler (4-1, 1.51 ERA, 49 SO)
Are these guys kidding me with these tiny ERAs? Come on!
The Yankees drafted Schlittler in the seventh round of the 2022 draft. He debuted last year with a 2.96 ERA in 14 starts and has been even better this year. He has that tiny 1.51 ERA and leads the league in FIP (1.51), WHIP (0.744), and K/BB (8.17). In case you’re wondering, the Orioles drafted Preston Johnson in the seventh round of the 2022 draft. He is currently on the roster of the Mississippi Mud Monsters of the Frontier League.
Schlittler’s Statcast page is a sea of red. His fastball averages over 97 mph and he has a curve ball that drops in at just 84. He strikes out over 30% of batters and hardly allows home runs.
Last year, Schlittler faced the Orioles twice. In 12.1 innings, he allowed just one run on 5 hits and struck out 15.
How do you think the Orioles will do this series? Let us know in the comments.
MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - APRIL 29: Ildemaro Vargas #6 of the Arizona Diamondbacks hits a single against the Milwaukee Brewers during the second inning at American Family Field on April 29, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. (Photo by Patrick McDermott/Getty Images) | Getty Images
McCann has set a mark by pitching more times before the end of April as a position player than anyone in MLB history, according to Baseball Reference’s Jessica Brand.
The long-time major league catcher has already thrown in four games, including Thursday’s blowout loss to the Milwaukee Brewers.
Woodruff’s first pitch of the game was a four-seamer at 84.2 mph, and it didn’t improve as he tried to settle into his outing. He worked around a leadoff walk with a pair of strikeouts in a scoreless first inning, then didn’t touch 85 mph with any of his pitches in the second while retiring a batter and surrendered a single to start the frame.
In hindsight, the first signs that something was amiss may have appeared in Woodruff’s previous outing against the Pirates, when 59 of his 71 pitches were varieties of fastballs. His four-seamer averaged 92.9 mph — which was actually up a tick — but he was part of the decision to come out of the game after only five innings, according to Murphy.
Despite Milwaukee Brewers starter Brandon Woodruff being pulled after just 1.1 innings, they still blew out the Arizona Diamondbacks 13-1 on Thursday. But in the process, Diamondbacks infielder Ildemaro Vargas made Venezuelan history.
Vargas went 2-for-4 with a pair of singles in the loss. He extended his hitting streak to 26, which ties the record for longest by a Venezuelan-born player, originally set by Wilson Ramos in 2019, via independent journalist Francys Romero.
Vargas’ .378 batting average is 20 points higher than Vladimir Guerrero Jr. of the Toronto Blue Jays, who has the second-best batting average in baseball at .358. Vargas’ .378 batting average is 42 points ahead of Xavier Edwards of the Miami Marlins, who is in second place in the National League in batting average at .336.
With the 2026 MLB season only a month old, both the players and owners are already looking to the future. The league’s collective-bargaining agreement (CBA) expires at the end of the season, and both sides are expected to engage in multiple contentious rounds of negotiation.
In an effort to get ahead of that, the owners and MLBPA will reportedly start meeting in the coming weeks, per The Athletic. At the center of those talks is a salary cap, which the owners are eager to implement.
We’re roughly one month into the 2026 Major League Baseball regular season, and that means it’s time for a league-wide check-in. Specifically, we’re going to highlight 10 baseball entities that qualify as “pleasant surprises” thus far. What’s a surprise? Something that’s gone contrary to general expectations. What’s the pleasant part of this? It means the player/team/etc has exceeded expectations in a positive way.
Now let’s look at 10 pleasant baseball surprises that stand out through the first month of the season. We’ll proceed in no particular order, just like time itself …
The Phillies swept the Giants in Thursday’s doubleheader at Citizens Bank Park with a 3-2 walk-off victory in Game 1 and a 6-5 walk-off victory in 10 innings in Game 2, leading them to a 3-0 start under interim manager Don Mattingly.
It was the first time the Phillies had two walk-off wins on the same day since July 24, 1998, against the Marlins. The last team to accomplish the feat was the Pirates on May 28, 2004, against the Cubs.
Apr 30, 2026; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Milwaukee Brewers starting pitcher Brandon Woodruff (53) walks off the mound with an injury in the second inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks at American Family Field. Mandatory Credit: Benny Sieu-Imagn Images | Benny Sieu-Imagn Images
Good morning everyone and happy Friday!
The M’s are on national TV tonight with an Apple TV broadcast on tap for the series opener with the Royals. The Apple TV broadcast has long been my favorite of the national TV presentations. Which ones have you been impressed with so far in 2026?
Adam Jude at The Seattle Times spoke to Mariners brass about the impressive start to the season for M’s second baseman Cole Young.
Around the league…
Brewers veteran starter Brandon Woodruff was removed from yesterday’s game and will undergo an MRI after seeing an alarming drop in velocity during his outing.
Rustin Dodd at The Athletic spoke to several professional athletes — including Logan Gilbert — about why they take on a “persona” when they get on the field or court. ($)
With the first month of the minor league season in the books, we‘re checking in on the top 25 Mets prospects who made our list ahead of the 2026 season.
I was a Nolan McLean skeptic coming into the season. It’s not that I thought he would be bad, but in the 48.0 innings he pitched last season, he was basically as good as the NL and AL Cy Young Award winners and I did not think that would be sustainable over an entire season. Well, here we are a month into the 2026 season, and by the eye test and by the metrics, it seems like it might be sustainable; the right-hander is somehow even better than he was last season! One month down, five more to go, if these trends continue, the Mets might be looking at their seventh Rookie of the Year and/or fifth Cy Young Award winner, either of which would be their first since 2019 when Pete Alonso won the former and Jacob deGrom won the latter.
It’s not exactly fair to grade Carson Benge the same way I am grading everyone else on this list (with the exception of Nolan McLean, but with him, it’s a moot point). Yes, Benge is struggling, but might he be excelling if he was in Triple-A? Might another hitter who is in the upper levels of the minors right now struggle just as much, if not more, if promoted to the majors tomorrow? Over the offseason, Benge spent a lot of time working with his former head coach at Oklahoma State, Josh Holliday; his swing during his time at OSU was decidedly not a major-league swing, with too much hand movement interfering with his ability to get them into optimal hitting position and to keep his body balanced. Early in the season, it was looking like Benge had gotten into that habit, something he eliminated just prior to signing with the Mets and going pro. Whether or not he is doing this intentionally, if so, if he begins to succeed with it or adjusts and streamlines his mechanics, remains to be seen. Regardless, this is certainly not the start that even the biggest Benge critic was expecting.
It’s been a confusing month for Tong. Outside of an elevated walk rate- command has been a weakness Tong has traditionally always had, though it really wasn’t much of a noticeable issue last season- Tong is still doing everything you want to see. He has limited batters to a .211 BAA and his 38 strikeouts are most on the team and second in the International League. Issuing all those free passes and allowing five home runs in 25.1 innings will screw with your ERA, though. I’m not too worried about Tong, and obviously I’d rather see excellent performance than poor performance, but I think the right-hander will start improving as the weather warms and he gets better acclimated to the Triple-A/MLB ball.
Two games in and A.J. Ewing already has 7 hits in Triple-A. That’s…something else. After having no trouble in Single-A, High-A, or Double-A last season, Ewing continued where he left off, demolishing the Eastern League until his promotion to Syracuse earlier this week. As I’ve said before, there are things Ewing could improve, mainly improving his groundball:flyball ratio, which was a not-that-great 55.1%:22.4% in Binghamton. While it would be great if he keeps posting impressive numbers and gets promoted to Queens sooner rather than later, I’d rather see Ewing not be rushed and improve on the things he could stand improving on, so he can truly be a big-time contributor when he gets the call
Reimer has gotten off to such a cold start to the season after having such a great year last year. He has been walking a lot, which has basically been sustaining his offense- such that it is- but he has also seen a spike in his strikeout rate by nearly 10%. The rest of his batted ball data is more of less in line with the numbers he posted in 2026, so here’s hoping this is just an adjustment period while facing better pitchers.
I repeated I don’t know how many times last year that when Ryan Clifford is on, he is capable of single-handedly carrying a team, but when he’s on the schneid, he is almost unwatchable. Such has been Ryan Clifford’s April. In his first two series’, he hit .219/.265/.250 in 8 games with 1 double, 2 walks, and 16 strikeouts. In his next series, he hit .200/.333/.333 in 6 games with 2 doubles, 3 walks, and 8 strikeouts. In his next, he hit .375/.474/.875 in 5 games with 2 doubles, 2 home runs, and 3 walks to 2 strikeouts. In his next, he hit .217/.296/.478 in 6 games with 2 home runs and 3 walks to 11 strikeouts. As I write this, Clifford has notched just one hit in the three games in Syracuse’s current series against Lehigh Valley while drawing 1 walk and striking out 7 times- and of course it was a home run. I’m just not a believer in Clifford’s hit tool; I mean, you’d hope with a .340 BABIP, a guy could do better than a .224 average, but here we are. He’s on the cusp of the majors, at this point, he is what he is.
I had very high hopes for Watson coming into 2026, and, well, they really haven’t been realized yet. He has roughly the same sample size in Double-A Binghamton in 2026 as he did last season, and basically everything is trending in the wrong direction (with the exception of his walk rate, which is slightly improved). He is inducing about 10% fewer groundballs and is allowing about 10% more line drives, contributing to the high BABIP and the more hits allowed than innings pitched. Hopefully, as the weather improves, so too does Watson.
Jack Wenninger has been one of the bright spots in an April that has seen so many players, in the majors and in the minors, under-perform. I’m happy that the right-hander is getting the recognition that he deserves. The stuff has been effective and there are no major red flags to think that he will be hit hard by the regression bug. I do think he is performing above his head a little bit, but I think Wenninger is unquestionably a major league caliber pitcher and will pitch in some capacity sooner rather than later.
Unlike 2024 first-round pick Carson Benge, 2025 first-round pick Mitch Voit was always going to be something of a project. Not considered nearly as polished as Benge, he ran roughshod over the lower minors, while Voit is not. The infielder has been treading water in Brooklyn, anchored down a bit by a sub-.300 BABIP that he should have the ability to raise in the long haul with more line drives hit with authority and fewer weakly hit fly balls- both things he is capable of doing.
Santucci’s 5.71 ERA is pretty deceptive. He is allowing too many walks- he’s always had that problem- but outside of that, he’s doing everything else right. He’s been limiting the hits, keeping the ball on the ground at a solidly average rate, and has been striking out a surprising number of batters; with a 53.1% LOB%, it just seems like Santucci is getting burned by the relievers after him failing to get outs.
What superlatives can we use that haven’t already been used? The youngest qualified player in the Florida State League, Peña is fourth in the circuit in batting average, sixth in on-base percentage, ninth in OPS, sixth in stolen bases and is walking more than he is striking out. His batted ball data is impeccable, and with the exception of not pulling the ball enough, almost perfect. Yes, he is just 18-years-old, but at this point, he is making the Florida State League look like child’s play. The Cyclones are gonna need some marquee players to put butts in those seats, let’s make it happen sooner rather than later.
Thornton was pitching exceptionally well in Double-A Binghamton last season, prior to an oblique injury sustained in early July that ended his season prematurely. This season? Not so much. So far in the young season, the left-hander is more hittable than he was last year, with his peripherals all trending in the wrong direction. Between the chilly weather and his shaking off the cobwebs, I wouldn’t be worried right now, but as a pitcher who is a sum-of-all-parts guy rather than someone with exceptional stuff, Thornton admittedly doesn’t have too much wiggle room for mistakes.
Through his first twelve games, Morabito hit .295. Over the course of his next 12, he hit .225. Nick Morabito is an extremely BABIP-dependent hitter given the fact that he hits over 50% of the balls he puts in play on the ground; case in point, he had a .333 BABIP over his first 12 games, and a .241 in his next 12. The outfielder has been walking a lot more, striking out a bit less, and has been showing a little more power as compared to last season, all of which is sorely needed ones if he wants to take the next step and become a meaningful MLB contributor on the offensive side.
Gordon began the season on the 7-Day Injured List with a lat injury. He began a rehab assignment with the St. Lucie Mets at the end of the month, allowing three runs on three hits while throwing 23 pitches, recording just one out.
Chris Suero was never going to run a particularly high batting average, but yeesh. Thanks to his power and his walk rate, he’s put up an above-average wRC+ though. Go figure. The backstop/outfielder has seen a 10% decrease in his line drive and groundball rates, and a massive 20% increase in his flyball rate. His Pull% dropped almost 20% while his Center% increased about 10% and his Opp% increased about 5%; in short, Suero is hitting more balls in the air, which is good, but he’s hitting fewer balls to his pull-side for power. All those extra flyballs are dying out there in center and right. Conceptually, should be a correctable issue, so here’s hoping.
Ross began the year on the 7-Day Injured List, suffering from ‘arm fatigue’. He appeared in four rehab games, two with Single-A St. Lucie and two with High-A Brooklyn, and looked fine in them. He has since appeared in a single game for Triple-A Syracuse after being activated, allowing a pair of runs in 0.2 innings, allowing a hit, walking two, and striking out one.
Lambert still is who he is; he’s been stingy allowing hits but negates that by allowing tons of walks, this season a bit more than last. Key to his schtick has been his ability to strike batters out left and right, and Lambert has not really been able to do that so far this season, at least up to his standards. Nothing about his performance has been all that red flag worthy outside of the uptick in walks and decrease in strikeouts, but we’re working with an 8.2 inning sample size here. I have confidence that things will normalize a bit as the season progresses.
Another player whose offense I expected to be depressed due to being in Brooklyn, I didn’t necessarily expect Jimenez’ batting line to be so depressing. Jimenez comes up to the plate looking to swing and swing hard, and that he does, resulting in plenty of strikeouts and plenty of poorly hit balls put in play for easy outs. Very few players hit their way out of Brooklyn, and Jimenez will likely have to either adapt, growing as a player and changing his approach to whatever degree, or risk posting the worst offensive numbers among every player in the minor league system like he is now.
Lantigua was held back in extended spring training when the minor league season began in order to better rehab a core muscle injury. He was activated at the end of the month and played in both halves of a doubleheader, notching one hit, a double.
The physical and baseball growth that was envisioned when Eli Serrano III was drafted still hasn’t manifested itself. The outfielder is walking plenty and has shown no major platoon splits against fellow left-handers, but the hit tool still isn’t up to snuff and the power still isn’t up to snuff; scouts and evaluators still rave about certain underlying hitting metrics and expected statistics, but at a certain point, we need to start seeing the results that have largely been absent.
Guzman got off to a slow start, hitting below the Mendoza line, failing to record a single extra base hit, and striking out at an elevated rate while barely walking. Around the middle of the month, things started clicking and hit a solid .275 with 4 doubles, 1 triple, and 4 home runs for the rest of the month, with 9 walks to 14 strikeouts. The strikeouts are baked into Guzman’s profile, but as long as he is hitting for power, you can live with that. He has about the same amount of games with St. Lucie this year as he did last year, and while he hasn’t been able to continue that torrid pace- he hit .333/.381/.604 with 13 doubles, 2 triples, and 3 home runs in 26 games- he has been looking solid since the middle of the month.
Expectations weren’t especially high for Gutierrez coming into the year. He showed some improvements as a hitter, the advanced metrics showed many were legitimate, and his defense generally got neutral-to-positive reviews. Playing in Brooklyn, I’m not surprised that he is struggling offensively, but more concerning to me is that there are more reports that his defense is bad. I knew he had a scattershot arm, but based on what I have heard, from what I have seen, and from the stats, it’s bad enough that he might not be able to stick behind the dish despite doing everything else back there solidly enough. As a 20-year-old catcher, there’s still plenty of time to figure things out, but he’s really going to need to improve his defense since his offensive profile is not exactly sky high.
Vargas started the season out slowly, but it looked like he was starting to come out of that funk towards the end of the month. In the last series he played in, against the Erie SeaWolves, he hit .412 with a pair of doubles and a pair of stolen bases, walking 4 times to 5 strikeouts. Unfortunately, he was placed on the on the 7-Day Injured List on the 29th with a shoulder injury.
When the basketball leaves a shooter’s hands they usually know when it’s going in. It feels soft off the fingertips, the rotation is spinning, the shot feels true.
In their first-round series against the Rockets, there’s one statistic that screams out amongst all the others: three-point shooting.
The key to the Lakers winning the series is simple: make more threes. The team that’s shot better from deep in every game has won.
NBAE via Getty Images
The math is simple: whichever team shoots better from three, they win the game.
For the Lakers, they started this series scorching hot from the perimeter.
Game 1: Lakers at 52.6% from deep — win.
Game 2: Lakers at 46.4% — win.
Game 3: Lakers at 41.4% — win.
Through the first three games, the Lakers efficiency from beyond the arc changed the geometry of the game.
Luke Kennard was great in the first three games of the series but struggled in the last two. He needs to find a way to have a bigger impact offensively if Los Angeles wants to advance. NBAE via Getty Images
But in Games 4 and 5 of the series, when those three-point shots weren’t falling, everything collapsed.
Game 4: Lakers at 22.7% — loss.
Game 5: Lakers at 25.9% — loss.
In the two losses the Lakers shot a combined 12 for 49 from three. An average of 24%. That’s not a variance. That’s a problem.
In the first three games, Houston shot an average of 28.5% from three.
However, in the last two games, the Rockets have not only shot at a higher clip of 37.5%, they’ve more than doubled up the Lakers in made threes overall with 26 combined made threes..
“You gotta give them a lot of credit. They made shots tonight, including some guys who normally don’t make threes,” said J.J. Redick after Game 5. “We just couldn’t make shots. We had some good looks from three that didn’t go down.”
One stat that hasn’t changed all series is the significantly more shots the Rockets have attempted compared to the Lakers. Houston has attempted 69 more field goals than Los Angeles across the five games in the series. That’s not a typo.
That’s what happens when you turn the ball over as much as the Lakers have, including more than 20 turnovers in Games 3 and 4.
Austin Reaves’ return was supposed to be a major boost for a struggling offense, but he shot 4-for-16 from the field in Game 5. NBAE via Getty Images
The Rockets also average nearly 15 offensive rebounds per game. They are the best offensive rebounding team in the league, and in the last 25 years.
When you lose the possession battle as badly as the Lakers have you better shoot the lights out to counteract that. That’s what the Lakers did early in the series. Now they aren’t and the consequences are dire.
Part of the change is the regression to the mean. The Lakers shot 36% from three during the regular season, and after starting the series at 46.8%, they are now averaging 37.7% for the series. Much closer to where they were during the season.
Part of it is bad luck. The Lakers had at least a dozen shots rim out in Game 5. Including several that were halfway down the basket before bouncing out.
Rui Hachimura’s emergence has been a win for the Lakers, but he needs to play a bigger role Friday night in Game 6. Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images
Part of it is the Rockets adjustments. And through five games in the series, they’re finally figuring out the Lakers.
Early in the series, Luke Kennard, who led the league in three-point shooting percentage this season, was given room to operate on the court. In the first game of the series, he punished Houston. He wasn’t quite as hot in the next two games, but he was still lethal from long range.
In Games 4 and 5, Houston started hunting him defensively. Following him around like a shadow. The result? Kennard is 0-for-7 from three in the last two games.
Reaves’ return in Game 5 injected energy and excitement but he was rustier than a swing set in an abandoned park. After missing the last four weeks with an oblique injury, he struggled to find his rhythm in his return, shooting 4-for-16 from the field, and 2-for-8 from deep.
And then there’s James.
He might be the biggest offender of them all. After shooting 44% from deep in the first three games, he’s 0-for-9 combined in the last two.
In the GOAT conversation, LeBron James’ legacy will never be the same if the Lakers become the first team in NBA history to lose when up 3-0. AP
At 41 years old, he can still dominate a game, including summoning his greatness when needed. But what he can’t do anymore is sustain that level of play for 40+ minutes a game over a grueling, physical, and punishing seven-game series.
And Houston knows it.
Once shooting stops being a weapon, it becomes a liability. So what do the Lakers do when the three-ball has gone missing? Will they adjust in Game 6?
If the Lakers don’t rediscover their perimeter touch soon, no other adjustments will matter. The math in this series has already told us everything we need to know.
If you shoot better from three, you win the game. Miss them, and you lose.
And if the Lakers lose two more, they will be on the wrong side of history forever.
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PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - APRIL 30: Paul George #8 of the Philadelphia 76ers reacts during the second quarter of a game against the Boston Celtics in Game Six of the First Round of the NBA Eastern Conference Playoffs at Xfinity Mobile Arena on April 30, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images) | Getty Images
This is what the Sixers were supposed to look like. This is who they were supposed to be, from the moment Paul George arrived in the summer of 2024, satchelful of Josh Harris’ cash in hand and visions of greatness dancing in his head.
Which is to say, connected and competitive. Explosive and entertaining. Versatile and voracious.
With the season seemingly lost, they have suddenly found themselves, beating Boston twice to even their best-of-seven first-round playoff series at three games apiece, with Game 7 scheduled for Saturday night in TD Garden.
Nobody saw this coming. Not after the Celtics clubbed the Sixers last Sunday — yes, it was just five days ago — to go up 3-1 in the series. But the Sixers used a dominant fourth quarter to win Game 5 on the road, and on Thursday stormed to a 23-point lead before prevailing, 106-93.
The offense hummed. The defense was active. The crowd was alive.
Pretty complete night. Except for one thing.
“It really does not matter,” Nick Nurse said.
He noted that in the playoffs, each game is an entity unto itself, that momentum is a myth. Which was his way of saying that none of this means a thing if they don’t finish the job.
“I’m tired of losing to them,” said Joel Embiid, who has seen the Celtics end the Sixers’ season three times in his 10 seasons. “We have a chance to accomplish something special.”
Certainly his return three games ago from an emergency appendectomy has galvanized the team. He poured in 33 points in Game 5, and while he shot poorly Thursday (6-for-18), he “commanded the offense,” in Nurse’s estimation, assembling a 19-point, 10-rebound, eight-assist stat line. (In another lifetime, Brett Brown would have said Embiid “quarterbacked the gym.”)
Meanwhile Tyrese Maxey was slithering his way to 30 points, and George was providing two-way excellence, scoring 23 while jousting defensively with Boston’s two excellent wings, Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown. Kelly Oubre Jr. and VJ Edgecombe scored 14 points apiece, and the Sixers won the rebound battle for the first time in the series. (It’s also possible they had something to do with the C’s dismal 12-for-41 three-point shooting, though it appeared Boston missed a ton of open looks, too.)
Again, this was the blueprint when George, a nine-time All-Star, signed his four-year, $212 million free-agent contract with Philadelphia in 2024. This was Daryl Morey’s fever dream. But ill health has plagued Embiid and George, the major reason the Sixers won just 24 games in 2024-25 and eked out a so-so 45 this season. (Not to be forgotten, either, is the 25-game suspension George served this year for violating the NBA’s anti-drug program.)
Now, George said, they are “super, super close” to becoming the team they hoped to be, way back when — a team on which “no one has to go out there and do it alone,” as he put it.
“I was more than fine coming in, being a third option and allowing those guys (i.e., Maxey and Embiid) to be themselves offensively,” he added. “I told ‘em, ‘I’m gonna get the stops. You guys go out there and go score, and be who you are on the offensive end.’”
So optimistic was George that on Media Day 2024 he declared that the team “should compete for a championship.” Turns out that the only good thing to come out of the season was the opportunity to draft Edgecombe at No. 3 last June.
Even so, the Sixers have seldom had their entire team on the court. Now they do. Now things have “kind of been playing out” the way George envisioned.
“I mean, it’s a joy and a pleasure to watch Tyrese get better, and Joel out there healthy,” he said. “It’s been fun.”
In Game 5 the Sixers repeatedly dumped the ball down low to Embiid in the second half, and he either exploited his mismatch with Boston’s centers or when double-teamed pitched the ball out to open shooters. The Sixers wound up outscoring the Celtics 28-11 in the fourth quarter to win, 113-97.
That put the fans in a giddy mood for Game 6. They cheered loudly when public-address announcer Matt Cord, in what might or might not have been his last game, noted that there were no Sixers injuries to report shortly before tipoff, and cheered even louder when Embiid joined his teammates on the court for warm-ups.
He went right to work, scoring the Sixers’ first five points on a short jumper and a three-point play. Boston nonetheless led after a quarter, 23-20, but Maxey notched 13 of his points in the second quarter and George added 10 of his points in the third, as the Sixers outscored the Celtics 62-40 over those two periods to take command.
In one sparkling sequence early in the third, Embiid and George fired respective behind-the-back passes to Oubre and Edgecombe for dunks, the latter after Oubre denied Brown at the rim to ignite a fast break.
Now the place was really jumping, and at night’s end the fans reprised their “We want Boston” chant, first heard in the play-in game against Orlando and mocked by Boston followers in Game 4.
But again, none of this matters anymore. All that matters is Game 7, and in looking ahead Maxey dipped deep into the cliche handbook.
“Sometimes it’s not about the X’s and O’s,” he said. “It’s about the Jims and Joes.”
Or, at least, the Jos. Among others.
“It’s gonna be a dogfight,” Maxey added. “It’s gonna be extremely difficult, every single second. Gonna be a roller-coaster ride.”
As Oubre said, “I wouldn’t say we’ve gotta be perfect, but we’ve gotta be close to it.”
Really, though, they just need to be themselves. They need to be who they thought they could be, and who they have finally revealed themselves to be. And not a moment too soon, either.
PHILADELPHIA, PA - APRIL 30: Jaylen Brown #7 of the Boston Celtics dribbles the ball during the game against the Philadelphia 76ers during Round One Game Six of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on April 30, 2026 at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by David Dow/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
#1 – ¿Dónde está España?
The Celtics’ Spain pick-and-roll action is the most efficient play call they have, especially against a big man like Joël Embiid. Therefore, it wasn’t a surprise to see them go to this action to start the game.
First with Sam Hauser and then with Jayson Tatum, the Celtics scored their first four points with this play call. Embiid really struggles to protect the drive, and Paul George can’t always stay connected to the ball-handler. Therefore, this creates opportunities at the rim—what more can you ask for?
Well, after running it twice in the first three minutes of the game, they stopped it for 16 minutes, and we had to wait until the end of the second quarter to see that play again. Why? Why change an offensive play call that works, that has been working all season, in an elimination game?
The Celtics ran it only a few times in the first half, and when you consider how efficient these actions are, it is hard to understand the reasoning that led the Celtics away from that movement.
The Celtics are scoring at a very poor efficiency rate against Paul George in isolation this series, but they are also struggling against the usual mismatches. Tyrese Maxey has been much better than in previous years at staying in front of Jaylen Brown, and he is now able to force mid-range shots instead of giving up drives.
Brown has also struggled against Kelly Oubre, committing four turnovers when defended by the Sixers wing. The driving lanes weren’t open as usual, and the 2024 Finals MVP wasn’t able to navigate space the way he likes to.
41% shooting from the All-Star, with only two assists and 18 points, was one of the reasons the Celtics couldn’t keep up in the game—but his defense might have been the biggest problem.
Calling yourself the best two-way player in the game in December is certainly a bold move, but what matters most is staying true to your word when the playoffs come around. Last night, Brown was the weakest link in the Celtics’ defensive shell and caused multiple breakdowns.
First, there is this transition defense against VJ Edgecombe, where he lets him go right by and doesn’t offer any resistance. This is the playoffs—you’re playing a Game 6. Every possession should matter, even in transition.
Then, in the half-court, the Celtics wanted to avoid giving Joël Embiid one-on-one situations against their centers. The goal was to send a second defender while making sure the corners and the paint remained protected. The problem is that Brown isn’t able to do both, and when the help comes from him, it gives a free pass to his defender at the rim—especially when the rotation behind him isn’t there either.
The body language and defensive execution on that play against Kelly Oubre as the ball-handler provide a great example of the defensive level we saw last night. There is no pressure, and the wing gets to his spot with ease.
As the Sixers realized Brown couldn’t keep up with Oubre off-ball, they put the wing in the opposite corner from Embiid, waited for the help to come, and for Brown to lose track of his matchup—leading to another open layup at the rim.
After Game 5, I wrote about how the Sixers exposed the Celtics’ drop coverage.
Guess what? The Celtics stuck to the same coverage, and the Sixers exposed them again. As we saw in the last game, both Neemias Queta and Nikola Vucevic don’t have the backpedaling ability and hip mobility to keep up with Tyrese Maxey… so why keep trying?
The Celtics should try putting Jayson Tatum on Joël Embiid to take away the two-man game from the Sixers. Kelly Oubre is an average enough shooter that you can try putting Neemias Queta on him—or go small, double aggressively on Embiid with better rotations—but something different has to be shown to the Sixers. They are getting too comfortable. You can’t let that happen in a Game 6.
We already mentioned his stellar defense in isolation, but the rim protection he also brings, for a wing, has been elite. On that Spain action from the Celtics—one of the rare times they didn’t score—he came off Jayson Tatum to block Queta at the rim. Wow.
Offensively, he brings the versatility needed alongside a quick guard like Maxey and a big man like Embiid. He knows how to play off them and use their gravity. On this play that gave the Sixers a 23-point lead, PG tricks Jaylen Brown and cuts behind the defense for an easy layup at the rim.
What becomes really problematic for the Celtics is that he is making the tough shots he likes to take from mid-range. This gives the Sixers another offensive option to attack smaller bodies like Sam Hauser.
The Jays have one game to step up and show who the best wings in this series are. But so far, with his elite defense and efficient offensive role, PG has been dominating that debate.
#6 – What happened to the offensive rebounds?
In three of the first four games, the Celtics had an offensive rebound rate above 40%. Over the last two games, that number dropped to 28% in Game 5 and 15% in Game 6. What happened to winning the possession battle and attacking a team weakness?
The Sixers ranked 27th in defensive rebound rate this season. Their numbers are basically saying: “crash the glass, and you’ll be fine.”
This needs to be addressed.
#7 – Turnover economy favors the 76ers
While they are losing the possession battle on the rebounding side, the Sixers are also forcing more turnovers—which is rare, but it is working. First, there is the way Jaylen Brown commits offensive fouls. He is already up to 10 this postseason, twice as many as the second player in that category.
Then there is the impressive length and defensive discipline from the Sixers, who know the Celtics’ playbook and have been very good at anticipating movements and forcing difficult passes.
Overall, the Sixers took three more shots than the Celtics and had three more free throws—a small possession gap that could cost Boston its season on Sunday in Game 7.
#8 – Has anyone seen Hugo Gonzalez?
The Celtics are losing the possession battle in both rebounds and turnovers. You know who might help in that area? Hugo Gonzalez.
The young rookie could also help with switchability. Against the Knicks earlier in the season, he showed he could defend both Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns in the same game. It might be time to unleash him against the Sixers.
#9 – Going to the bench with 10 minutes left?
This one is more of an open question for you in the comments, because it’s another strategic decision I don’t fully understand.
Does it make sense because you want to approach Game 7 with as much energy as possible? Or did you expect the bench unit to pull off a comeback? Was it more of a message to the starters?
#10 – The best words in sports… Game 7!
The best two words in sports… GAME 7! 🍿
It’s win or go home with a trip to the East Semis on the line. The 76ers and Celtics will meet in a Game 7 for the 9th time, the most between any two teams in NBA history.
Now is the time to breathe and enjoy it while it lasts, because the season could end this weekend. Still, it’s hard not to be excited about a Game 7 at TD Garden—a chance to see what this group is really made of.
PHILADELPHIA, PA - APRIL 30: Paul George #8 of the Philadelphia 76ers and Jayson Tatum #0 of the Boston Celtics look onm during Round One Game Six of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on April 30, 2026 at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by David Dow/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
The Boston Celtics haven’t learned their lesson. Instead of preparing for a second-round series against the New York Knicks, they’re boarding a flight back home to host the Philadelphia 76ers in Game 7.
On Thursday night, the Celtics fell to the Sixers, 106-93, squandering their second chance to close out Philadelphia after taking a commanding 3-1 series lead. With an offense that has lost its identity and a defense unable to contain Joel Embiid’s postseason resurgence, Boston is down to its third and final chance to avoid one of the most catastrophic collapses in its franchise’s history.
The demons that have tormented the Sixers for years — and haunted Joel Embiid — no longer linger in Philadelphia’s locker room. This is now on the Celtics. They lost home-court advantage, failed twice to close out the series, and find themselves in a familiar position Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown know all too well.
“A lot of us have been in this situation before, Game 7,” Tatum told reporters at Xfinity Mobile Arena, per CLNS Media. “So it should be a fun one.”
During the NBA’s pandemic-shortened 2020 season, the Celtics found themselves pushed to seven games in the semifinals against the Toronto Raptors after taking a 2-0 series lead. In 2023, they allowed an inferior Atlanta Hawks team to take them to six games in the first round, then lost in seven to a 43-39 Miami Heat in the Eastern Conference Finals. Last year, they twice squandered 20-point leads at home just before Tatum ruptured his right Achilles tendon in Game 4 at Madison Square Garden.
For the better part of nine years, Tatum and Brown have battled their track record as leaders of a team addicted to inviting chaos.
The fourth quarter of Game 5 and the third quarter of Game 6 don’t suggest Philadelphia was the better team. That overlooks the issue entirely. Those frames exposed Boston as a team once again, lacking the killer instinct that they had in the regular season. They held an 86-85 lead to start the fourth quarter in Game 5 and shot 3-of-22 from the field (13.6 percent), scoring just 11 points. In Game 6, they scored 14 points in the third quarter while shooting 6-of-22 from the field (26.1 percent).
That’s not the norm, as both quarters rank among their lowest-scoring stretches since Opening Night — first and third lowest, respectively.
“Our intentions are good,” Tatum said. “We want to go out there and play the right way and win. It’s just, we just got to be a little bit more together, a little bit tougher. Play with more pace, play faster. You know, how they have played majority of the season and since I’ve been back. It’s just kind of getting back to who we are.”
PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA – APRIL 30: Jaylen Brown #7 of the Boston Celtics reacts after being called for a foul during the second quarter of a game against the Philadelphia 76ers in Game Six of the First Round of the NBA Eastern Conference Playoffs at Xfinity Mobile Arena on April 30, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Tatum exited the game with 4:03 left in the third quarter. He rode a stationary bike before returning to Boston’s bench and did not return for the remainder of Game 6. After the loss, he clarified that leg stiffness was the reason for his exit and said he expects to be ready for Game 7.
Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla turned to the team’s reserves, giving Payton Pritchard, Baylor Scheierman, Jordan Walsh, Luka Garza, and Ron Harper Jr. the entire fourth quarter. That group showed more life than the starters had since the second quarter of Game 5, outperforming Boston’s previous five frames. They shot 48 percent from the floor against Embiid, Tyrese Maxey, and V.J. Edgecombe, and sparked an 11-0 run to cut Philadelphia’s lead down to 12 points with 7:40 left in regulation.
For a moment, it was an encouraging (yet temporary) shift. But ultimately, it still wasn’t enough.
Embiid and the Sixers never felt threatened because the Celtics hadn’t solved a single issue that kept them from advancing at home in Game 5. Derrick White missed two floaters six feet away from the rim, then argued with officials after a clear double dribble call, all in the first quarter. Neemias Queta again ran into foul trouble, picking up three with more than five minutes left before halftime, including two while Embiid was on the bench. Boston’s inefficiency even showed up at the charity stripe, as Tatum and Brown combined to miss six free throws, adding to a damaged offense that’s hanging by a thread.
Brown, who played over 28 minutes in Game 6, picked up his 10th offensive foul of the series. That accounts for nearly half of Boston’s 23 offensive fouls, the most of any team this postseason.
For the first time since opening the season 0-3 in October, the Celtics are staring at a potential second three-game losing streak. Only this one would end their championship aspirations for good if they come out as the same sloppy, uninspired group that’s allowed the Sixers to batter them around over the past two games.
“We can’t let that happen in the next game,” Brown admitted to reporters, per CLNS Media. “We gotta be the harder playing team.”
Saturday night will be the ninth Game 7 between Boston and Philadelphia, the most of any playoff rivalry in NBA history. Historically, the Celtics have won six of the previous eight. But it’ll take a massive turnaround on all fronts to prevent the Sixers from eliminating Boston from the postseason for the first time since 1982.
“All things considered, we’re in a great spot going home for a Game 7,” Brown said. “Expecting a great atmosphere. Expecting a great fight from our group. Last two games wasn’t the best, but you move on. So I’m looking forward to it, and I’m excited for Game 7.”
PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA – APRIL 30: The Boston Celtics bench looks on during the fourth quarter of a game against the Philadelphia 76ers in Game Six of the First Round of the NBA Eastern Conference Playoffs at Xfinity Mobile Arena on April 30, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Through their own doing, the Celtics have brought themselves to a point they never should have reached. There’s a difference between a lesson and one that’s been nearly a decade in the making without much improvement. They keep putting themselves in this spot time and time again, all while expecting a different result. That’s not growth, nor does it fall in line with the process of learning. At some point, it’s simply an underachievement.
Boston’s bench brought more to the table than its starters, and that’s nearly impossible to overcome in the playoffs. The Sixers entered the series as the underdog, missing Embiid for the first three games. In response, the Celtics displayed the urgency of a team waiting for Philadelphia to slip up rather than a team determined to chase after the series clincher themselves. It’s nothing new, and in the past, it’s only led to their season’s end.
During their 2024 championship run, the Celtics suffered only three losses. After each one, they responded with urgency and a win. That’s the difference between a team ready for the next stage and one setting itself up for failure.
They could still very easily put the Sixers away in seven, but at what cost? Fatigue is a real factor in the playoffs, as is momentum. The Knicks just eliminated the Hawks by scoring 140 points while watching the Celtics grapple to compete. New York is a much greater challenge than Philadelphia, meaning the margin for error wouldn’t be what it’s been in the first round if Boston does make it out. The Knicks are stronger, healthier, and have bragging rights. They know what it takes to outplay the Celtics.
For Boston, there’s no safety net. That’s gone. The Celtics have to be at their best or at least very, very close to it on Saturday night. They can praise Embiid and Philadelphia all they want, but that’s not the deciding factor that has extended this series. It’s the result of falling into bad habits that have long left this team hanging their heads in disappointment, and facing the same postgame questions about decisions and improvements that should have been made.
They were the superior team throughout the regular season, and through no fault but their own, they have become a watered-down version of themselves.
That hasn’t been enough to get away with in Games 5 and 6, and it won’t work in Game 7.
The bottom line is the Celtics need to approach Saturday night determined to make a statement. Because through the first six games, it doesn’t seem like Tatum and Brown have graduated in ways their 2024 championship suggested. They were given a pass last year under extreme circumstances, and although a talent-depleted roster did make it harder at the start of the season, we’re 88 games deep with this group.
The Celtics weren’t lucky. They earned each of their 56 regular-season wins to lock the No. 2 seed in the East. Any leniency for integrating the offseason’s additions expired long ago, and it doesn’t excuse their fumbles at the goal line. This is completely on them.
“We have an opportunity for Game 7 at home, and there’s been great teams, great players that have played in Game 7s, and it’s part of the journey,” Mazzulla told reporters, per CLNS Media. “We didn’t play well tonight. We’ll move on to the next game.”
In their 79 years of existence, the Celtics have never blown a 3-1 series lead. That possibility is now staring them in the face.
Not even 12 hours after the final buzzer sounded from Houston’s game five victory, Shams Charania of ESPN broek the unfortunate news that Kevin Durant will be missing Game 6 of the Rockets-Lakers with a bone bruise on his ankle that he sustained in Game 2. The usual return timeline for a bone bruise is two weeks, so it is very likely Durant will not return at all this series.
Thankfully, Houston has looked pretty good — and more like last year’s team — without Durant on the floor, and that should continue. In Durant’s absence, members of the young core like Jabari Smith jr, Alperen Sengun, Tari Eason, and Reed Sheppard have stepped up in big ways. In fact, Kevin Durant’s injury has saved the Rockets in this series in various ways. This is not a jab at Durant, but rather a credit to Ime Udoka for finally making the necessary adjustments. The Rockets are really easy to defend because Ime Udoka is so obstinate about how he employs Durant.
In the one game he played, Durant committed NINE turnovers to a squad not known for its defense. With Sheppard, Thompson, Eason, Smith, and Sengun in the starting lineup, the Rockets are much different team to defend using the strategies the Lakers employed against Durant when he was the primary ball handler. The young Rockets put a different kind of defensive strain on individual Laker defenders due to their tenacity and athleticism.
There were just 11 total team turnovers for the Rockets in Game 5, and Durant nearly matched that himself in the one game he played due to Udoka’s strategy. Sheppard, Smith, Eason, and Holiday combined for 12 assists to 1 turnover, while Sengun and Thompson combined for the bulk of the team turnovers with 8 total between them.
In my opinon, Durant’s continued absence will allow the starting lineup of Reed Sheppard, Amen Thompson, Jabari Smith jr, Tari Eason, and Alperen Sengun to continue building chemistry, which will be beneficial, as this lineup has performed the best for the Rockets this series. Additionally, I feel that Durant’s injury really forced Ime Udoka to make adjustments, as now he does not have Kevin Durant to bail out his lack of offensive creativity.
The Kevin Durant-less Rockets will play Game 6 in Houston with a tip-off of 8:30 pm. As always, be sure to check back at the Dream Shake for pre- and post-game coverage.
Knicks center Mitchell Robinson opened up about his mental health after both he and Atlanta Hawks guard Dyson Daniels were ejected for fighting in Game 6 of their first-round playoff series on Thursday night.
Knicks center Mitchell Robinson opened up about his mental health after he and Hawks guard Dyson Daniels were both ejected for fighting in Game 6 of their first-round playoff series Thursday night.
“Knew something was gone happen,” Robinson wrote in a Facebook post after the Knicks’ 140-89 series-clinching win — and the largest win in a playoff game in franchise history.
“My mental just not the same I’m just lost in the world at the moment.”
The alternate angle of this Knicks-Hawks fight is WILD.
— New York Post Sports (@nypostsports) May 1, 2026
Robinson also reshared his pregame post that said, “Trying so hard to be calm.”
That comes as new video footage, appearing to be from a fan emerged on social media.
Taking to his Instagram Story, Robinson posted a video that showed a cartoon animal singing the message: “Hey, I gotta question cus I really need to know, do you ever get tired of being bitch ass n—a, .p—- ass n—a.”
Things got chippy when OG Anunoby made a pair of free throws to extend the Knicks’ lead to 50 points with 4:39 remaining in the first half.
During the second attempt Robinson boxed out Daniels, who hit him with an elbow, before they came face-to-face and exchanged words.
Knicks center Mitchell Robinson opened up about his mental health after both he and Atlanta Hawks guard Dyson Daniels were ejected for fighting in Game 6 of their first-round playoff series on Thursday, April 30, 2026. X
They got tangled up and things escalated from there, with players and coaches from both teams holding the players back.
Atlanta center Onyeka Okongwu and the Knicks’ Jalen Brunson held Robinson back as the melee nearly spilled into the fans sitting courtside.
Both players were ejected and received technical fouls. X
Hawks guard Nickeil Alexander-Walker and several coaches pulled Daniels away.
At one point, Knicks head coach Mike Brown ended up on the ground underneath the scuffle.
Robinson and Daniels both received technical fouls and were ejected.
Knicks center Mitchell Robinson (23) scuffles with Atlanta Hawks guard Dyson Daniels (5) as forward Onyeka Okongwu (17) and guard Nickeil Alexander-Walker (7) attempt to hold them back during Game 6. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect
The NBA hasn’t handed out any suspensions, as of Friday morning.
Robinson and Daniels’ beef had been building after they had a dust-up in Game 1 and Robinson got a technical, as noted by The Athletic’s Fred Katz.
New York Knicks center Mitchell Robinson #23, fighting with Atlanta Hawks guard Dyson Daniels #5, in the 2nd quarter of Game 6 of the first-round playoff series in Atlanta on April 30, 2026. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post
The pair exchanged words throughout the series and things reached a tipping point Thursday night.
Meanwhile, on the court, it was a brutal beatdown by the KNicks.
Atlanta’s 83-36 deficit was the largest at halftime in NBA playoff history, according to ESPN.
TORONTO, CANADA - APRIL 26: Scottie Barnes #4 of the Toronto Raptors high fives teammates during the game against the Cleveland Cavaliers on April 26, 2026 at the Scotiabank Arena in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Vaughn Ridley/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
Game 6 hasn’t necessarily been kind to The Six.
The Toronto Raptors have a mixed-bag of results in game six of playoff matchups:
Game six: 6-7 (one during the NBA bubble)
Facing elimination: 2-3
Home: 2-2
Away: 3-5
For the Raptors to extend their current series to a seventh game, they must exorcise a familiar demon in the Cleveland Cavaliers. Tip-off is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. EST on Friday.
This looks familiar
If it feels like both teams have been here before, it’s likely because Raptors and Cavaliers fans remember their 2015-16 playoff matchup. It was the first post-season meeting between the two organizations, and ultimately ended up being the most competitive series in the ‘LeBronto’ three-parter.
Like in the current series, the Raptors had strong starts to games one and two before subsequently falling apart in the second half. Led by Kyle Lowry and DeMar DeRozan, Toronto protected its home court with a convincing Game 3 win and a gritty Game 4 performance.
Much of the criticism in Cleveland was directed at the team’s tertiary star, Kevin Love. During their nightmarish visit to Toronto, the dynamic power forward averaged 6.5 points on 21.7 per cent shooting. Defensively, Love recorded one block and zero steals during this stretch. But in Game 5, the veteran responded with 25 points while shooting 80 per cent. Love also finished with two blocks and one steal. After struggling in this year’s trip to Toronto, Evan Mobley also bounced back in Game 5 with a team-high 23 points, three blocks and one steal.
The Cavaliers secured the series win ten years ago in the following contest, this time with their Big 3 of Love, LeBron James and Kyrie Irving combining for 83 of the team’s 113 points. While the Raptors certainly struggled with the infamous trio, it was a combination of J.R. Smith catching fire (15 points, five three-pointers) and the bench’s efficiency from the perimeter that pushed the Cavaliers to the finish line.
Realistically, Mobley, Donovan Mitchell and James Harden show up in the close-out game tonight. But for the Raptors to force a seventh game, they can’t let a bench option like Dennis Schroder explode for 19 points as he did in Game 5.
It must be a team-effort
In the times the Raptors have ended up on the victorious side of a Game 6, it has typically involved a committee-like approach. Getting this far into a series often means teams are familiar with each other’s playbook. This leads to offence being generated from either elite on-ball creation or players getting open looks due to a rotating defence.
The last time the Raptors won a Game 6, it was during a 125-122 win against the Boston Celtics in the bubble. Six players finished with double-digit scoring. March Gasol also recorded eight points. Even with the generational Kawhi Leonard in 2019, the Raptors needed their depth. Against the Milwaukee Bucks in Game 6, Toronto had four players with at least 14 points. Serge Ibaka and Norman Powell also contributed nine points each. In the title-clinching win, the Raptors had five players record at least 15 points.
With Brandon Ingram’s heel issues and Scottie Barnes dealing with a right quad contusion, the Raptors may not have enough firepower – of the healthy variety – to produce a team-wide offensive explosion. But if they are to muster something, it begins with the foursome of RJ Barrett, Collin Muray-Boyles, Jamal Shead and Ja’Kobe Walter.
Barrett must rediscover his shooting form, both from the three-point line and the charity stripe. The Canadian wing averaged 27.3 per cent from deep and 46.2 per cent from the free-throw line in the last two games. Any kind of spacing Barrett can manufacture will be invaluable on a team that might be missing its two best shooters in the starting lineup. Simply put, Barrett also needs to be a better free-throw shooter for the amount of time he’s on the court, and especially due to his wrecking-ball play style.
Murray-Boyles is clearly dealing with multiple injuries. At times, it looks like his body could fall apart at any moment. Despite his visible impact, the rookie is only averaging 20 minutes per game in the series. With the emergence of Schroder and the big man duo of Mobley and Jarrett Allen showing up in the last game, Raptors head coach Darko Rajakovic needs to keep Murray-Boyles on the court as long as possible.
Shead and Walter provide a similar archetype that isn’t fully appreciated until an elimination game. They are at their best when they’re knocking down triples and playing a type of defence that doesn’t require support. We know the pair can do the latter. While Walter is arguably the best shooter on the team, Shead might end up being the true X-Factor. The Cavaliers dared the former Houston Cougar to beat them from outside when it mattered most in the fourth quarter of Game 5. Shead had multiple attempts and couldn’t make Cleveland pay. Expect the Cavaliers to double-down in Game 6.
The others
The post-season typically boils down to unexpected players having moments. It would be nice if Jamison Battle could catch lightning in a bottle (again). Jakob Poeltl – despite playing limited minutes – will probably continue to be efficient with his usage and take advantage of the rare size advantage.
But there could be a massive game in store for Sandro Mamukelashvili. The sharpshooting power forward recorded 10 points in Game 5 after scoring a combined two points in the prior two contests. Mamukelashvili was debatably the most valuable bench option for Toronto during the regular-season. If he can help negate the impact of the Cavaliers’ bench, it’ll go a long way in forcing a final game.
Heading into the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs, the Dallas Stars looked to make it four straight postseason runs of getting to, at least, the Western Conference Finals.
In his first season behind the Dallas bench, Glen Gulutzan helped the Stars to a second-place finish in the Central Division, with Stanley Cup aspirations, per usual.
But their dreams didn't become reality. Their dreams turned into nightmares as they were sent packing by the Minnesota Wild in the first round after six games:
While the roster had a few differences from the previous season, as all rosters do, one big piece was missing from that team.
And that's now New York Islanders head coach Pete DeBoer, who was the person who led the Stars to the Western Conference Finals in 2023, 2024, and 2025.
The longtime bench boss was relieved of his Dallas duties following the decision to pull his No. 1 netminder, Jake Oettinger, early in Game 5 of their must-win 2025 Western Conference Finals game after the American goaltender allowed two goals on the first two shots he faced.
Casey DeSmith relieved him, allowing three goals on 20 shots in a 6-3 loss to the Edmonton Oilers.
It was a move that DeBoer had no reservations about, as he was trying to spark his group. It was just a move that ultimately didn't work, and he lost his job over it.
Now, DeBoer has a lot of work to do on Long Island to get his new team in a position to play like Stanley Cup contenders, with general manager Mathieu Darche needing to give him a roster that is capable.
The Islanders have missed the playoffs the last two seasons. The goal for 2026-27 is to ensure Matthew Schaefer is playing playoff games this time next season.
The Rockets take the court tonight in Houston for Game 6 of their series against LeBron James and the Lakers again minus Kevin Durant…and are favored to force a Game 7 after impressive back-to-back-wins without their Hall of Fame teammate.
The Lakers enter Game 6 still ahead 3–2, but the tone of the series has shifted dramatically after those back‑to‑back losses. Despite LeBron James’ 25 points in Game 5, Los Angeles’ offense has sputtered, failing to reach 100 points in the last two contests. Austin Reaves did return for LA from an oblique injury in Game 5, but Luka Dončić (hamstring) remains out. Reaves played 34 minutes and scored 22 points, but it was not enough to finish off the Rockets.
Houston, meanwhile, has completely flipped the energy of the series. After losing the first three games, the Rockets have stormed back, winning Games 4 and 5 without Durant but with physical defense and balanced scoring. Jabari Smith Jr. led the way offensively with 22 points, while Tari Eason and Alperen Şengün added 18 and 14, respectively. The Rockets were outrebounded 41-34 in Game 5 but defensively held the Lakers to 42% shooting from the field and just 26% (7-27) from deep.
Ultimately, Game 6 will hinge on composure and execution. The Rockets have momentum, home‑court advantage, and a sudden belief that they can complete an historic comeback. For their part, the Lakers need to execute better on offense. Expect LeBron to take on heavy playmaking duties and it is fair to expect Reaves to move back into the starting lineup after coming off the bench in Game 5.
Lets take a closer look at tonight’s matchup and take into consideration lineups, injuries, and other factors affecting the line and total.
We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on how to catch tipoff, odds courtesy of DraftKings recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.
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Game Details and How to Watch Live: Lakers vs. Rockets
Date: Friday, May 1, 2026
Time: 9:30PM EST
Site: Toyota Center
City: Houston, TX
Network/Streaming: Prime Video
Rotoworld has you covered with all the latest NBA Player News for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type!
Game Odds: Lakers vs. Rockets
The latest odds as of Friday courtesy of DraftKings:
Moneyline: Los Angeles Lakers (+142), Houston Rockets (-170)
Spread: Rockets -3.5
Total: 206.5 points
This game opened Rockets -3.5 with the Game Total set at 207.5.
Be sure to check out DraftKings for all the latest game odds & player props for every matchup this week on the NBA schedule!
Expected Starting Lineups: Lakers vs. Rockets
Los Angeles Lakers
PG Austin Reaves
SG Marcus Smart
C Deandre Ayton
SF LeBron James
PF Rui Hachimura
Houston Rockets
PG Amen Thompson
SG Reed Sheppard
C Alperen Sengun
SF Tari Eason
PF Jabari Smith Jr.
Injury Report: Lakers vs. Rockets
Los Angeles Lakers
Luka Doncic (hamstring) has been declared OUT for tonight’s game
Houston Rockets
Kevin Durant (ankle/knee) has been declared OUT of tonight’s game
Steven Adams (ankle) has been declared OUT of tonight’s game
Fred VanVleet (knee) has been declared OUT of tonight’s game
Important stats, trends and insights: Lakers vs. Rockets
The Lakers are 26-17 on the road this season
The Rockets are 31-12 at home this season
The Rockets are 38-49 ATS this season
LA is 48-38-1 ATS this season
The OVER has cashed in 41 of the Rockets’ 87 games this season (41-46)
The OVER has cashed in 44 of the Lakers’ 87 games this season (44-43)
Austin Reaves shot 4-16 from the field (2-8 from beyond the arc) in Game 5
Reed Sheppard was 2-7 from deep in Game 5 but was 8-20 in the 2 previous games in Houston in this series
LeBron James is 0-9 over the past 2 games from three-point range
James is 11-29 (37.9%) from the field the last 2 games / He shot 51.5% from the field during the regular season
Rotoworld Best Bet
Please bet responsibly. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, call the National Gambling Helpline at 1-800-522-4700. Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the NBA calendar based on data points like recent performance, head-to-head player matchups, trends information and projected game totals.
Once the model is finished running, we put its projections next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.
Here are the best bets our model is projecting for tonight’s Lakers and Rockets’ game:
Moneyline: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Rockets on the Moneyline
Spread: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Rockets -3.5 ATS
Total: Rotoworld Bet is recommending a play on the Game Total UNDER 206.5
Want even more NBA best bets and predictions from our expert staff & tools? Check out the Expert NBA Predictions page from NBC Sports for money line, spread and over/under picks for every game on today’s calendar!
If you’re looking for more key trends and stats around the spread, moneyline and total for every single game on the schedule today, check out our NBA Top Trends tool on NBC Sports!
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The Nashville Predators have something to root for in this year's Stanley Cup Playoffs.
Despite being eliminated from contention back in early April, the Predators have a conditional 2027 NHL Draft pick from the Vegas Golden Knights that can be upgraded if Vegas reaches the Western Conference Final.
In the 2025 trade that sent Colton Sissons and Jeremy Lauzon to the Golden Knights for Nic Hague, the Predators also received a 2027 conditional third-round pick.
If the Golden Knights win two rounds, that pick upgrades to a second-round selection.
That'd give Nashville three picks in the first two rounds of the 2027 draft.
Vegas currently has the Utah Mammoth facing elimination in Game 6 on Friday in Salt Lake City, after a 5-4 double-overtime win on Wednesday that put the series at 3-2.
The Predators and the Golden Knights have made a handful of transactions between them over the past two years, beginning with Vegas star forward and 2023 Conn Smyth winner, Jonathan Marchessault, signing with Nashville in the 2024 offseason.
Along with the Hague trade, Nashville sent Cole Smith to the Golden Knights at the 2026 trade deadline for a 2028 third-round pick and defenseman Christoffer Sedoff.
The Golden Knights are getting solid production from their acquisitions from Nashville in the playoffs. Both Sissions and Smith have three points in five games, giving Vegas a boost from the bottom six.
Nashville saw consistent production from Hague in his first season, totaling 15 points in 62 games. On the other hand, Marchessault's play has steadily declined, posting a career-low 31 points in 62 games.
The Predators latest acquisition, Sedoff, has no points in 12 games this season with the Milwaukee Admirals and played in just one of the Admirals three playoff games.
DALLAS, TEXAS - APRIL 12: Ryan Nembhard #9 of the Dallas Mavericks walks backcourt during the second half against the Chicago Bulls at American Airlines Center on April 12, 2026 in Dallas, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the GettyImages License Agreement. (Photo by Stacy Revere/Getty Images) | Getty Images
When I previewed Ryan Nembhard back in October, the framing was modest by design. Pass-first guard. Two-way deal. Floor general in the margins. Best case: define his lane so clearly that the Mavericks couldn’t justify cycling him out of the roster. Worst case: blend into the background.
Six months later, he set the franchise’s rookie record for assists in a game with 23 against the Bulls in the season finale, breaking a mark his own head coach set in 1995. So we can dispense with the question of whether the season was a success. It was. The harder question, the one that lingers under the highlight reel, is what kind of NBA player he gets to be from here. Let’s walk through what actually happened.
Season Retrospective
Nembhard barely played in October. Two minutes here, ten there, sixteen against San Antonio in the opener. He was the fifth or sixth option in a backcourt rotation that included D’Angelo Russell, Brandon Williams, Dante Exum, and, for the first stretch of games as Jason Kidd performed what he believes was an unlocking maneuver, Cooper Flagg as the starting point guard.
The door cracked open on November 28 in Los Angeles. Nembhard scored 17 points on 7-of-11 shooting in 23 minutes against the Lakers. Three nights later in Denver, he became the first undrafted rookie since Stephon Marbury in 1996 to record 25 points and 10 assists with zero turnovers in a game: 28 points, 10 assists, 12-of-14 from the floor, 4-of-5 from deep. It was a coming-out party for the undrafted player.
The next month was the best stretch of his rookie year. Across thirteen December games he averaged 9.2 points and 6.8 assists on 48 percent shooting. He had 13 assists against Miami, 11 against Utah in an overtime loss, 7 in a one-point win over Denver before Christmas. The Mavericks went from a historically poor offensive team to something resembling functional, and the math wasn’t subtle: when Nembhard ran the show, the ball moved, the spacing made sense, and the finishers Dallas had stockpiled actually got clean looks.
Then the roster’s limits caught up to him.
Dallas was hard-capped at the second apron, which meant the front office couldn’t convert his two-way deal until January 6 at the earliest. Then the calendar started working against them anyway. Two-way players are limited to 50 NBA appearances, and Nembhard was burning through his allotment. By early February, the math was unmistakable: keep playing him and he’d hit the cap; sit him and let the conversion happen on the back end. Dallas chose patience. His last NBA appearance before the conversion was February 5 against the Spurs.
The conversion finally came on February 28. Tyus Jones, acquired in the Anthony Davis trade as point guard depth, was waived to clear the roster spot. Nembhard signed a two-year deal with a team option for 2026-27. The early Brandon Williams parallel from my preseason write-up, undrafted two-way guy plays his way onto a permanent contract, wasn’t aspirational anymore. It happened for Nembhard much the same way.
What happened next was murkier.
March was a rollercoaster. Williams had emerged as a real backup option. Flagg was getting more reps initiating the offense. Nembhard’s minutes contracted. There were four-minute appearances and five-minute appearances and outright DNP-CDs, including one against the Lakers. Facing a roster of Lakers wings none shorter than 6-foot-5, Kidd opted not to put him on the floor at all. The implication wasn’t subtle. Against certain matchups, his size becomes a problem the coaching staff can’t scheme around.
He still flashed: 12 assists with zero turnovers against Atlanta on March 18, 9 dimes against the Clippers on March 21 in overtime. But the role had narrowed, and the eye test started raising questions the December breakout had quieted.
April rebooted the workload. With Dallas closed out of any meaningful seeding race and the rotation fully thinned, Nembhard started every game and averaged 30 minutes. The finale against Chicago was a perfect storm. Flagg out after ten minutes with the ankle, the Bulls offering essentially zero defensive resistance, and Nembhard given the keys for a full 38 minutes against a defense that looked actively allergic to closeouts. He finished with 15 points, 23 assists, and 9 rebounds. Take the perfect storm out of it and the closing kick is still real. In his last three games before the Bulls, he posted 21 assists against just one turnover in 86 minutes.
For the season: 60 games, 27 starts, 6.6 points, 5.3 assists, 2.2 rebounds. Led all NBA rookies in assists per game. 316 total assists against 85 turnovers, a 3.7-to-1 ratio that would be impressive for a veteran and is borderline absurd for an undrafted rookie. He belongs in the league. Kidd said as much in his postgame after the finale, unprompted: “He belongs in this league.”
Outlook
So what is he, going forward?
The honest answer requires distinguishing between three different jobs. Can Ryan Nembhard be the entrenched long-term starting point guard for a team trying to win? Very unlikely. Not because of what he showed this year, but because of what the league has become. There were once a few smaller lead guards starting on serious teams. Now there’s basically one, and Trae Young (6’2) is now on the rebuilt Wizards, looking to contend. Young is carried by an offensive ceiling that Nembhard is unlikely to match. The size question doesn’t go away with development. Elite on-ball defenders look at a 5’11” point guard the way a pitcher looks at a hitter who can’t catch up to a fastball. They’ll keep throwing it until you prove you can.
Can he be a fifteen-minute-a-night contributor on a winning team? Maybe. The passing translates anywhere. The decision-making is real. The shot, 35.6% from three on the year and 44.4% in his starts, is functional enough that defenses can’t just sag off him. In the right ecosystem, with the right teammates around him, that’s a useful nightly piece.
Can he be a third point guard, on a standard contract instead of a two-way, on a team trying to compete? Almost certainly yes. That’s the floor, and it’s a floor most undrafted rookies never reach. Brandon Williams found that floor last year and turned it into a real role. Nembhard’s already cleared that bar.
The question of which version Dallas gets, or whether the answer is “none of them, here,” isn’t really one he controls. The Mavericks are about to hand the keys of the front office to someone new. That person inherits an audition tape. The Marbury game in Denver, the Mavericks rookie assist record, the absurd assist-to-turnover ratio, and also the DNPs against length-heavy lineups, the March stretches where the role evaporated, and the size question that won’t ever fully answer itself. Whoever’s reading that tape will decide whether Nembhard is a piece of what comes next or an asset that helps build it.
That’s just the cruel calculus of an undrafted guard who exceeded every modest expectation set for him and now has to clear a much higher bar to stick where he made his name.
What I’m certain of is this: on a Mavericks roster with very few feel-good stories this season, Ryan Nembhard was one. He showed up on uncertain nights and gave the team something it didn’t have anywhere else. He earned the contract. He earned the record. He earned the conversation.
Whatever the next chapter looks like, and wherever it gets written, the floor he established is real. The ceiling is the league’s to determine. And the guy in the middle of it, the 5’11” undrafted Canadian who led every rookie in the NBA in assists per game and broke his coach’s franchise record on the last night of the season, has earned the right to be evaluated honestly, not generously.
He belongs in the league. Now we find out what the next Mavericks GM does with that.